HCV Group Evaluation and Treatment Uptake (HCV GET-UP) Intervention
NCT ID: NCT03242655
Last Updated: 2021-03-23
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
96 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2017-02-21
2020-10-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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While past HCV therapies have been relatively ineffective, new oral treatment regimens with direct-acting antivirals are substantially more efficacious, with few side effects, and cure rates as high as 100% for both HCV+ and HIV/HCV+ individuals. Importantly, successful HCV treatment has been associated with decreased mortality. Unfortunately, there are significant gaps along the HCV care cascade that prevent patients from ever realizing the benefits of these revolutionary medications. Approximately 10% of all HCV+ patients, and even fewer IDUs, have ever initiated HCV treatment.
Given the ease and efficacy of the new HCV medications, investigators have an unprecedented opportunity to treat IDUs within medical settings that they are already accessing, such as primary care clinics. Community-based primary care clinics, such as Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs), are abundant throughout the US and serve populations at high risk for HCV, such as IDUs; studies show an HCV prevalence rate of approximately 8% in FQHCs almost 5 times greater than the general population. Over the past year at Montefiore Medical Center, investigators have piloted onsite HCV treatment at one FQHC and treated nearly 50 patients (81% former or current IDUs) with direct-acting antivirals, with 93% cure rates.
Despite high HCV cure rates for those treated in primary care at our FQHC, only a small minority of eligible patients has initiated treatment. Though onsite treatment reduces obstacles related to specialty referral, patient level barriers to HCV evaluation and treatment uptake still exist. IDUs in particular often have limited HCV knowledge, as well as low perceived vulnerability to poor HCV-related health outcomes, low self-esteem and poor self-efficacy, high levels of perceived stigma, and mistrust of healthcare providers. These, as well as other barriers, prevent many IDUs from ever initiating HCV evaluation or starting the treatment uptake process. Investigators therefore propose to test an HCV Group Evaluation and Treatment UPtake (HCV GET-UP) intervention to improve HCV medical evaluation and treatment uptake for HCV and HCV/HIV IDUs within an FQHC. Group-based interventions, often familiar to IDUs, provide social support and encourage behavior change, which together promote enhanced engagement in care. Group-based care can also allow efficient delivery of health-education and medical treatment. Informed by the Information-Motivation-Behavior (IMB) model. Investigators hypothesize that a group-based HCV intervention, HCV GET-UP, delivered in an FQHC already accessed by patients, will improve HCV treatment uptake by: (1) providing HCV education; (2) increasing motivation by minimizing stigma, and addressing competing priorities and social norms; and (3) increasing self-efficacy and related behavioral skills. Investigator propose the following specific aims:
Aim 1: To assess the feasibility and acceptability of HCV GET-UP. Investigators will pre-test HCV GET-UP by conducting two group interventions (each consisting of 4 weekly sessions; 8 participants in each intervention group). Investigators will assess feasibility by examining process measures, and acceptability using a brief, self-administered questionnaire after each of the 4 sessions. Investigators will also conduct focus groups after the entire 4-session intervention. Investigators will then refine HCV GET-UP based on these findings.
Aim 2: To conduct a pilot randomized controlled trial of the efficacy of HCV GET-UP for improving HCV treatment uptake in an FQHC. Investigators will enroll 96 HCV+ or HIV/HCV+ IDUs and randomize them 1:1 to HCV GET-UP plus onsite treatment in primary care (intervention) versus onsite treatment alone (control). Our primary outcome is HCV treatment uptake, and secondary outcomes will include HCV medical evaluation, HCV treatment completion, and HCV cure.
Aim 3: To determine potential moderators and mediators of the impact of HCV GET-UP on HCV treatment uptake, using a sequential explanatory design. First, Investigators will perform exploratory quantitative analyses to determine if there are specific patient characteristics (demographic, clinical) that moderate the intervention effect, and if there are mediators (reduced stigma, peer support, increased self-efficacy) of HCV GET-UP's impact on treatment uptake. Second, investigators will perform semi-structured interviews with 20 participants randomized to HCV-GET UP to explore potential moderators/mediators deduced from quantitative analyses.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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HCV GET-UP (Group Intervention)
HCV GET-Up (Group Evaluation and Treatment Uptake)
HCV GET-Up (Group Evaluation and Treatment Uptake)
Groups will meet for 4 weekly 1-hour sessions facilitated by the PI and focused on providing education, motivation, and behavior change skills, along with an HCV medical evaluation. Patients will then be offered HCV treatment by individual provider after 4-week group evaluation and education intervention.
Control
Individual onsite HCV treatment at a primary care center
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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HCV GET-Up (Group Evaluation and Treatment Uptake)
Groups will meet for 4 weekly 1-hour sessions facilitated by the PI and focused on providing education, motivation, and behavior change skills, along with an HCV medical evaluation. Patients will then be offered HCV treatment by individual provider after 4-week group evaluation and education intervention.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* greater than fifth grade reading level
* English proficiency
* current or former IDUs
* willingness to be randomized to a group intervention.
Exclusion Criteria
* decompensated liver disease
18 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
NIH
Montefiore Medical Center
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Brianna L Norton, DO, MPH
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Montefiore Medical Center/Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Locations
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Comprehensive Health Care Center
The Bronx, New York, United States
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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K23DA039060-03PD
Identifier Type: NIH
Identifier Source: secondary_id
2016-6948
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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